Summary
Current immunotherapies dont work for most people with cancer. Researchers have identified an overlooked immune cell type that may react to targeted therapies to rally a more powerful immune response in more cancer patients.
Immunotherapy is showing great promise for treating cancer. But so far, this approach has been effective in only about 20% of all cancers. To advance those results, researchers are looking for new ways to mobilize the immune system to destroy tumors.
Most immunotherapy drugs act on one type of immune cells called T cells. Drugs called checkpoint inhibitorsrelease the brakes on these cells, spurring them to mount an attack against a tumor. Researchers have learned that checkpoint inhibitors seem to work best in people whose tumors have been invaded by T cells sensing some kind of threat from the cancer before the treatment is started.
The problem is that most tumors dont have many T cells in them. In order to design an immunotherapy that works on more people, researchers have been looking for additional immune cell types to rally against cancer.
Now, an MSK research team reports finding a promising candidate: a group of immune cells called innate lymphoid cells (ILCs). These cells are present in many different tissues and appear to have mild antitumor effects in their normal resting state. The researchers showed that activating ILCs with drugs mobilizes T cells to shrink pancreatic cancer tumors. This could be an important step, as pancreatic cancers have not responded to checkpoint inhibitor drugs.
We think this is an important finding both for pancreatic cancer research and cancer immunotherapy overall, says Vinod Balachandran, a surgeon-scientist affiliated with theDavid M. Rubenstein Center for Pancreatic Cancer Researchand a member of theParker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy. We are learning there are multiple ways to use the immune system to fight cancer. We think this is a sign that new immunotherapies are on the horizon.
Dr. Balachandran made the discovery in collaboration with cancer immunologistsTaha Merghouband Jedd Wolchokof the Human Oncology and Pathogenesis Program. The finding is reported today in Nature.
This is a novel treatment that works together with one of the most successful immunotherapies we have today.
ILCs are part of the bodys innate immune system where immune cells are programmed to put up an initial defense against infections and other threats, and further amplify the immune response by activating T cells. But ILCs were discovered only 10 years ago, so they have not been the focus of immunotherapy efforts. Now, innate immune cells are beginning to draw more interest from the cancer-research community. Dr. Balachandran and colleagues investigated if and how these cells played a role in the bodys response to cancer.
For the Nature study, the team looked in human pancreatic tumors to see if ILCs were present. They saw that a subtype of these cells called ILC2s were present in larger numbers in tumors compared with normal organs, suggesting they were responding to the tumors. The researchers also found that pancreatic cancer patients with more ILC2s in their tumors lived longer, suggesting ILC2s possibly had an anticancer function.
The team then tested if ILC2s could help control tumors in mice. Removing ILC2s caused pancreatic tumors to grow faster.
We thought, if these cells have protective tendencies against cancer, maybe we can figure out ways to activate them, Dr. Balachandran says.
ILC2s have receptors on their surface that control whether they multiply. The researchers found that dosing the ILC2s with a protein called interleukin 33 (IL-33) activated them, and caused both them and T cells to expand, which in turn caused tumors to shrink. IL-33 did not shrink tumors in mice that didnt have ILC2s, proving the ILC2s were the key cells mediating the effects.
The research team then looked for ways to further amp up ILC2 antitumor activity. Checkpoint proteins on the surface ofT cells act as brakes to prevent them from attacking the bodys own tissues. But this also limits the T cells antitumor activity. As ILC2s are related to T cells, Dr. Balachandrans team wondered whether checkpoint proteins also acted as brakes on ILC2s.
Immunotherapy at MSK
Cancer is smart, but your immune system is smarter. Discover how Memorial Sloan Kettering is deploying immunotherapy to fight cancer.
They discovered that when activated by IL-33, ILC2sexpress an important checkpoint protein on their surface called PD-1. This has interesting immunotherapy implications: PD-1 is one of the most important brakes on T cells, yet PD-1-blocking checkpoint inhibitors have not worked well against pancreatic tumors. This suggested treating mice with IL-33 may make pancreatic tumors sensitive to PD-1-blocking checkpoint inhibitors.
When the researchers gave IL-33 plus a PD-1 inhibitor to the mice, the tumors shrank even more. Activating ILC2s by adding IL-33 appeared to be the key for PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors to work well against the mouse pancreatic tumors.
Dr. Balachandran and his team are currently working on developing a drug that can activate ILC2s in humans as the next step.
This is a novel treatment that works together with one of the most successful immunotherapies we have today, Dr. Balachandran says. This could be a way to sensitize cancers that typically would not respond to PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors.
Read the original:
Recently Discovered Immune Cell Type May Be Key to Improving Pancreatic Cancer Immunotherapy - On Cancer - Memorial Sloan Kettering
- Sjogren's Disease Symptoms - Dry Mouth & Eyes | NIAMS - June 11th, 2025
- Why don't bats get cancer? Researchers discover protection from genes and strong immune systems - Phys.org - June 11th, 2025
- HIV/AIDS: Facts about the viral infection that attacks the immune system - Live Science - June 11th, 2025
- SARS-CoV-2 protein found to spread between cells, triggering immune attack on healthy cells - Medical Xpress - June 11th, 2025
- Study reveals mechanisms behind antibiotic-related immune disruptions in infants - News-Medical - June 11th, 2025
- Israeli scientists discover immune cells that both fight and fuel breast cancer - The Times of Israel - June 11th, 2025
- One thing everyone should know about innate immunity - Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health - June 11th, 2025
- Immune System - National Institutes of Health (NIH) | (.gov) - June 11th, 2025
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa-derived metabolites and volatile organic compounds: impact on lung epithelial homeostasis and mucosal immune response -... - June 11th, 2025
- Discovery Suggests Method to Offset Antibiotic-Caused Harm to Infant Immune Systems - PR Newswire - June 11th, 2025
- Modified CAR-T cells target widespread protein found in multiple types of cancer - Medical Xpress - June 11th, 2025
- Indian team uncovers how the immune system brakes when viruses team up - India Today - June 11th, 2025
- COVID boosters do not harm T-cell function in the vulnerable - News-Medical - June 11th, 2025
- Atherosclerosis: from lipid-lowering and anti-inflammatory therapies to targeting arterial retention of ApoB-containing lipoproteins - Frontiers - June 11th, 2025
- New study reveals the cellular network behind food tolerance and allergies - The Jerusalem Post - June 11th, 2025
- As COVID cases rise again, the top three things you must do to strengthen your immunity - The Economic Times - June 11th, 2025
- 2025-06 - Getting the message from particles to protection - Wits University - June 11th, 2025
- Alopecia Areata - Hair loss Causes & Living With It | NIAMS - June 3rd, 2025
- Atopic Dermatitis Treatment, Symptoms & Causes | NIAMS - June 3rd, 2025
- Psoriasis Types, Symptoms & Causes | NIAMS - June 3rd, 2025
- Autoimmune Diseases | NIAMS - June 3rd, 2025
- Neoantigens combined with in situ cancer vaccination induce personalized immunity and reshape the tumor microenvironment - Nature - June 3rd, 2025
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (Lupus): Diagnosis, Treatment, and Steps ... - June 3rd, 2025
- What Is Scleroderma? Symptoms & Causes| NIAMS - June 3rd, 2025
- Vision, Immune System Studies and Hardware Inspections Keep Crew Busy - NASA (.gov) - June 3rd, 2025
- Vitamin C, anyone? The truth about immunity boosters - The Times - June 3rd, 2025
- COVID-19 vaccination atlas using an integrative systems vaccinology approach - Nature - June 3rd, 2025
- Key to treating Alzheimers may lie within immune system, UVA researchers say - WVIR - June 3rd, 2025
- Study says original COVID-19 vaccination did not stop immune system from fighting variants - The University of Arizona Health Sciences - June 3rd, 2025
- Engineered viruses and gene therapy halt tumor growth and extend survival in mice - News-Medical - June 3rd, 2025
- Integrated lncRNA and mRNA analysis reveals the immune modulatory mechanisms of antimicrobial peptide BSN-37 in mouse peritoneal macrophages - Nature - June 3rd, 2025
- Neuro-immune crosstalk in cancer: mechanisms and therapeutic implications - Nature - June 3rd, 2025
- Research Spotlight: New Therapeutic Approach Stops Glioblastoma from Hijacking the Immune System - Mass General Brigham - June 3rd, 2025
- To fight HIV, antibodies boost the immune system - drugdiscoverynews.com - June 3rd, 2025
- Innovative technology simplifies T cell harvesting for cancer immunotherapy - News-Medical - June 3rd, 2025
- Daily briefing: Immune cell spies give the brain information about the gut - Nature - June 3rd, 2025
- Innovative treatment uses patients own immune system to fight cancer - The Independent - June 3rd, 2025
- Eosinophil innate immune memory after bacterial skin infection promotes allergic lung inflammation - Science | AAAS - April 5th, 2025
- Researchers Discover mRNA Vaccines Leave Lasting Mark on the Immune System - SciTechDaily - April 5th, 2025
- Scientific Journeys: Uncovering how dioxins affect the immune system - National Institutes of Health (NIH) (.gov) - April 5th, 2025
- Oligodendroglial precursor cells modulate immune response and early demyelination in a murine model of multiple sclerosis - Science | AAAS - April 5th, 2025
- Measles can ravage the immune system and brain, causing long-term damage a virologist explains - The Conversation - April 5th, 2025
- Microscopic Instigators - The University of New Mexico - April 5th, 2025
- Changes in the immune index before and after surgery in urinary malignancy patients with AIDS - Nature - April 5th, 2025
- Non-immune targeting of CXCR3 compromises mitochondrial function and suppresses tumor growth in glioblastoma - Nature - April 5th, 2025
- 8 Supplements That Will Boost Your Immune System - Verywell Health - April 5th, 2025
- Improving immunotherapy for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma: learning from patients and preclinical models - Nature - April 5th, 2025
- Redefining the immune landscape of hepatitis A virus infection - Nature - April 5th, 2025
- What Happens to Your Immune Health When You Take Vitamin C and Zinc Together? - Verywell Health - April 5th, 2025
- Diet Has A Major Impact On The Immune System - WorldHealth.net - April 5th, 2025
- Top 7 ways to boost your immune system - The Indian Express - April 5th, 2025
- Kinetics of pIgR and IgM immune responses in snakehead ( Channa argus ) to inactivated Aeromonas hydrophila via immersion and intraperitoneal... - April 5th, 2025
- What Is Man Flu? - Cleveland Clinic Health Essentials - April 5th, 2025
- Dynamics of T cell subpopulations and plasma cytokines during the first year of antineoplastic therapy in patients with breast cancer: the BEGYN-1... - April 5th, 2025
- Publication in npj Vaccines Reports Cross-reactive and Long-Lasting Immune Responses for self-amplifying mRNA (samRNA) COVID-19 Vaccine Booster... - April 5th, 2025
- 9 Supplements, Tonics, and Oils to Boost Immune Health - W Magazine - April 5th, 2025
- Preoperative pan-immuno-inflammatory values and albumin-to-globulin ratio predict the prognosis of stage IIII colorectal cancer - Nature - April 5th, 2025
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (Lupus) - Who gets it? | NIAMS - February 7th, 2025
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (Lupus) Basics - National Institute of ... - February 7th, 2025
- Long COVID: women at greater risk compared to men could immune system differences be the cause? - The Conversation - February 7th, 2025
- What is Pemphigus? Symptoms & Causes | NIAMS - February 7th, 2025
- How the immune system influences pancreatic cancer: New interactions provide therapeutic insights - Medical Xpress - February 7th, 2025
- Mitochondrias Secret Power Unleashed in the Battle Against Inflammation - SciTechDaily - February 7th, 2025
- WNT11 Promotes immune evasion and resistance to Anti-PD-1 therapy in liver metastasis - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- The role of the behavioral immune system in the expression of short and long-term orientation in young Chilean men during the COVID-19 pandemic - BMC... - February 7th, 2025
- Harvard nutritionist eats these 5 foods to keep her 'immune system strong' and 'energy high' - CNBC - February 7th, 2025
- Micro Immune Response On-chip (MIRO) models the tumour-stroma interface for immunotherapy testing - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- Personalized Therapeutic Vaccine Steers the Immune System to Fight Kidney Cancer | Newswise - Newswise - February 7th, 2025
- Identification of m6A methyltransferase-related WTAP and ZC3H13 predicts immune infiltrates in glioblastoma - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- Serotonin attenuates tumor necrosis factor-induced intestinal inflammation by interacting with human mucosal tissue - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- Identification of the immune infiltration and biomarkers in ulcerative colitis based on liquidliquid phase separation-related genes - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- FLASH radiation reprograms lipid metabolism and macrophage immunity and sensitizes medulloblastoma to CAR-T cell therapy - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- Young Innovators: U of S researcher uses bat immune systems to find next generation therapies - Saskatoon Star-Phoenix - February 7th, 2025
- World Cancer Day 2025: Chronic stress, immune system, and cancer risk- How are these connected? - The Times of India - February 7th, 2025
- New research unlocks key to long-lasting immune response in cancer and chronic diseases - The Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity - February 7th, 2025
- Microbial Dynamics and Immune Response to NTHi in COPD - Physician's Weekly - February 7th, 2025
- MHE Week in Review RFK Jr. Spotlight - Managed Healthcare Executive - February 7th, 2025
- Psoriasis Basics: Overview, Symptoms, and Causes - January 27th, 2025
- Vitiligo Symptoms, Treatment & Causes | NIAMS - January 27th, 2025
- The Surprising Connection Between Obesity, Parasites, and Your Immune System - SciTechDaily - January 27th, 2025